Wednesday, May 7, 2025
A Professional Electronic Surveillance Operation Described
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
Google: Human Surveillance Isn't Enough - Target Dolphins
The system, announced on Google's blog, makes use of 38 years of underwater recordings from the Wild Dolphin Project (WDP), the longest-running study of its kind. These recordings capture everything from mother dolphins calling their calves with unique signature whistles to aggressive "squawks" during confrontations. The AI processes these vocalizations in real-time, searching for patterns that could unlock the dolphins' communication code. more
Is Your Phone Secretly Listening to You?
Spend a day or two discussing this topic out loud with your phone next to you the whole time. Make sure that you don’t search about this topic on any of your devices—not just your phone.
During this time, pay close attention to the ads you’re served while online—ads on social media feeds, websites you visit, apps you use, and those on your smart TV if you have one. Then, if you begin seeing ads about the topic you chose to discuss, chances are you’ve confirmed the eavesdropping and caught your phone red-handed. more
Friday, April 4, 2025
Spying on Children: Dino, the Stool Pigeon Dinosaur
Dino is a plush toy recommended for children ages 4-9. They play with it. It plays back, as only an AI chatbot can. It answers questions, creates interactive stories, can handle jokes, and even help with math homework. Pretty clever, and only $249.00, if you can get one. Production is currently not mass.
Cute idea. Innovative, but not totally original. Toy companies have been offering "interactive" dolls for a long time. I am guessing we are all too young to have had a Thomas A. Edison talking doll, introduced in 1887. Zipping into the early 1960's there was Chatty Cathy, by Mattel. Still drawing a blank? How about Furby from the late 1990's. All these toys were "interactive" in that the child made them speak, and these responses were limited.
Welcome to the 21st Century! Interactivity is really here. Dino supposedly can "AI think" and answer. Since I have never seen a Dino in the wild, supposedly will have to do based on the website's claims.
"So, Kevin, how is this Spy News?!?!"
Dino has another talent. It can squeal. Its interactions zap to an app faster than you can say, "You dirty rat."
- Tell Dino you raided the cookie jar, your parents will know.
- Ask Dino where to hide the [fill in the blank] you stole, they will know.
- Tell Dino you hate your parents and are plotting revenge, they will know.
The gotchas are infinite, kid. Keep your knees loose. (JS)
Friday, March 28, 2025
Not So Secure: Drones Can Now Listen to Underwater Messages
Researchers from Princeton and MIT have developed a method to intercept underwater communications from the air, challenging long-standing beliefs about the security of underwater transmissions.
The team created a device that uses radar to eavesdrop on underwater acoustic signals, or sonar, by decoding the tiny vibrations those signals produce on the water’s surface. In principle, the technique could also roughly identify the location of an underwater transmitter, the researchers said. more
Monday, March 24, 2025
An El Cheapo Laser Listener (<$30.)
Thursday, March 20, 2025
Former Council Candidate Bugs Town Hall
John Garate, 50, was arrested by Davie police on Dec. 19 after they caught him leaving Town Hall with a recording device he secretly placed in a conference room the day before, according to an arrest report.
...the recording shows Garate entering the conference two hours before the Dec. 18 meeting. After he left Town Hall, but before the meeting, police checked the conference room and “verified that a device was placed on the bookshelf.”
The next morning, after the meeting, Garate returned to Town Hall, entered the conference room, picked up the device and was stopped by police as he was leaving. “During the search incident to arrest, in the defendant’s pocket was a black device with a USB attachment,” the police report states.
John Garate, 50, was arrested by Davie police on Dec. 19 after they caught him leaving Town Hall with a recording device he secretly placed in a conference room the day before, according to an arrest report. more
Sunday, March 16, 2025
FutureWatch: Acoustic Eavesdropping with Multi-Antenna mmWave Radar
Saturday, January 25, 2025
FutureWatch: "Proactive Eavesdropping"
Note from website: This Nature Research Intelligence Topic summary is one of 30,000 created with generative AI and the cited references. We take care to ground generative text with facts, and have systems in place to gain human feedback on the overall quality of the process. We however cannot guarantee the accuracy of every summary and welcome feedback.
Sunday, January 12, 2025
The National Museum of Eavesdropping
"During the year 2024, the Museum of Eavesdropping was visited by 77 people. The increase in visitation has consequently also brought an increase in income...
The National Wiretapping Museum was opened on May 23, 2017. It is one of the most special in Albania, which tries to tell young people and foreigners one of the darkest periods of the country's history, being the Central Headquarters of Service Wiretapping Secret, from 1944 – 1991. more
But not all eavesdropping is what it appears to be... MU researcher eavesdrops on bugs more
Wednesday, December 11, 2024
Who Needs TSCM... China’s top court vows to combat eavesdropping, illegal recordings...
Tuesday, December 3, 2024
Cautionary Tale for Traveling Executives - A Case of Spy Tradecraft...
...five Bulgarian nationals who are accused of spying in Britain as part of a ring co-ordinated by Jan Marsalek, the former chief operating officer of Wirecard.
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Bulgarian national Katrin Ivanova (Elizabeth Cook/PA) |
She said: “These images were extremely important as they showed Christo Grozev together with others of interest to Russia, Eliot Higgins.
She showed off her “tradecraft” by relaying images, using covert recording equipment and capturing Mr Dobrokhotov’s iPhone PIN number, Mr Morgan said. more
New Eavesdropping Technology Reveals Vulnerabilities in Underwater Communications
The team detailed their findings in a paper presented at the ACM MobiCom conference on November 20. According to TechXplore, they explained how their device can pick up vibrations on the water’s surface, allowing it to eavesdrop on underwater messages. This technique could also potentially identify the location of the transmitting underwater device, making it a powerful tool for intelligence gathering or adversarial actions. more
Thursday, November 14, 2024
Man Destroys Dental Clinic Claimed Dentist Implanted Eavesdropping Chip
A woman and her husband have justified their decision to damage a Brazilian dental clinic after they strangely claimed the dentist secretly placed a chip in her mouth three years ago to eavesdrop on their family's conversations.
The shocking incident was recorded from the Belo Horizonte office when 27-year-old Kenia Aparecida and her 31-year-old partner came and asked to see the dentist on Wednesday, the Telegraph reports.
"They pulled out two of my teeth and without my authorization, they put a chip in my mouth and listened to my conversations. But my husband saw that it was in (the mouth) and the dentist does not want to take it out". more with video
Monday, November 4, 2024
Spies Can Eavesdrop on Phone Calls by...
... sensing vibrations with radar.
Spies can eavesdrop on conversations by using radar to detect tiny vibrations in smartphones and employing artificial intelligence to accurately transcribe them. The trick even works in noisy rooms, as the radar homes in on the phone’s movement and is entirely unaffected by background hubbub.
Millimetre wave sensing is a form of radar that can measure movements of less than 1 mm by transmitting pulses of electromagnetic wave energy and detecting the reflected beams.
Suryoday Basak at Pennsylvania State University and his colleagues used a commercially available sensor operating between 77 and 81 gigahertz to pick up the tiny vibrations in a Samsung Galaxy S20 earpiece speaker playing audio clips. They then converted the signal to audio and passed it through an AI speech recognition model, which transcribed the speech. more$
Tuesday, October 22, 2024
Ford Has a Better Idea: Patent In-Vehicle Eavesdropping
There was a time when people had to whisper to avoid being heard by the wrong ears. Now, in the era of smart devices, we’ve also got to worry about our smartphones listening to our conversations for advertising purposes.
But the eavesdropping situation seems to be reaching new heights with Ford’s recently published patent, which shows “systems and methods” that assist with showing more targeted ads.
The document also discloses that to achieve this goal, the new technology would listen to conversations that take place among people in the vehicle. more
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
Mistress Recorded Trysts with Italian Minister on ‘Spy Glasses’
Gennaro Sangiuliano, the culture minister who is married, met Maria Rosaria Boccia, a former men’s fashion retailer from Pompeii, at a political rally a year ago.
She subsequently attended ministerial meetings, gained access to the Palazzo Montecitorio, home to one of Italy’s two parliamentary houses, and accompanied Sangiuliano, 62, at official events around the country, from Taormina in Sicily to Riva Ligure in Liguria.
Boccia has accused her former lover of misusing public funds to pay for her trips, providing access to confidential information and appointing her as an adviser despite a conflict of interest.
She has supported her assertions with audio recordings of phone calls with ministerial officials, screenshots of emails and flight tickets, and photos of confidential programmes for official events.
Throughout their affair she recorded an unknown number of private conversations, using her phone and a pair of Ray-Ban Stories sunglasses, which have a built-in camera and microphone. Footage taken also shows the corridors of the Palazzo Montecitorio, where it is forbidden to film. more
Wednesday, August 14, 2024
History: How to Build a Bugging Device in 1917
Want to build a bug; known as a Detectograph back in 1917?
Just write to a magazine, like The Electrical Experimenter, and they would tell you. Things were pretty simple back then, but the parts were not cheap. The average full-time worker's wage was $13.21 per week.
Friday, August 2, 2024
Voice Over Wi-Fi Vulnerability Let Attackers Eavesdrop Calls And SMS
This process consists of two main phases: negotiation of encryption parameters and performing a key exchange using the Internet Key Exchange protocol, followed by authentication....
These findings highlight the systemic flaws in the implementation of VoWiFi, which could make users vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks, and communication security is compromised on a global scale, consequently requiring better security measures in VoWiFi protocols and implementations. more
Tuesday, July 30, 2024
FutureWatch: AI to the Max - Will Intelligent Eavesdropping Bugs Be Possible?
As scientists continue to make advances using human tissue to grow brains in laboratories, one neuroscientist is naming the existential elephant in the room: could lab-grown brains ever become truly conscious?